United Nations Children’s Fund (UNICEF) has received a donation of approximately $10 million from the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) in support of Nigerian government’s initiative to improve water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) services.
The support is for the next three years inbresect of WASH services in three North-west states of Kebbi, Sokoto and Zamfara.
A statement by UNICEF on Wednesday said: “The United States Agency for International Development (USAID) has awarded UNICEF $9,978,800 over three years to support the Nigerian government’s initiative to improve water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) services in Kebbi, Sokoto and Zamfara States in north-west Nigeria.”
It said that the funds would provide life-saving WASH services to more than 300,000 people in need of assistance.
It disclosed that USAID’s assistance would help to build community-centered approaches to deliver, operate, and manage sustainable WASH services in rural areas, and to foster resilience in communities, in collaboration with the state governments.
It added that this would also help rebuild dilapidated infrastructure and support community efforts to increase access to proper sanitation, adopt good hygiene practices, and improve water quality.
The statement quoted USAID Nigeria Mission Director, Director Dr. Anne Patterson to have said: “USAID is dedicated to ensuring clean water for more Nigerians,” noting that: “This new activity with UNICEF will help reduce waterborne diseases to keep more people, especially children, healthy.”
The statement recalled that the 2019 National Outcome Routine Mapping of WASH services (WASHNORM), had shown that 30 percent of Nigerians lacked access to basic water services and less than 10 percent had access to safely-managed water services.
It also showed that while 44 percent of Nigerians had access to basic sanitation services, 23 percent, or 46 million people, lacked access to proper sanitation.
Access to safe hygiene facilities nationwide is low, at 16 percent.
It lamented that in the country, Sokoto and Kebbi States had the lowest levels of access to basic water services at 38 percent and 39 percent, respectively, with access to basic sanitation also low in Kebbi, Zamfara and Sokoto States, at 35 per cent, 38 percent, and 41 per cent, respectively.
It decried that only five percent of people in Sokoto and one percent in Kebbi had access to safely managed water services.
It said this severe shortage of clean water supply, toilets, and handwashing facilities in households across Nigeria presented a formidable challenge.
“Poor access to WASH services is the major cause of diarrheal morbidity and mortality in Nigeria and is associated with at least 70,000 deaths in children under five each year,” it stated.
It said lessons from the COVID-19 pandemic had also reinforced the importance of adequate and safe water, basic sanitation, and proper hygiene practices to stem the spread of the disease, worldwide including in Nigeria.
UNICEF Representative in Nigeria, Peter Hawkins, was quoted in the statement to have said: “We are extremely grateful for the timely and much-needed WASH support from the United States Government. The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic, coupled with prevailing challenges and gaps in WASH services in north-west Nigeria, is detrimental to the development of children and rural communities. This assistance is a testament to USAID’s commitment to the children and people of Nigeria.”
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